Connect windows 7 laptop windows xp computer
Remote Registry Service. Connect the admin share of remote computer. November 1, , pm. Tim says: Crap, I think I did it wrong… December 2, , am. January 14, , pm. March 17, , pm. Harold B. Harold June 16, , pm. November 4, , pm. April 1, , pm. Cmd says: Better use ipc-connection to get the authorisation done. December 19, , pm. Mark says: Is there any way within the product to disable all remote functionality rather than relying on standard Microsoft restructions and firewalls?
Thanks November 15, , am. David says: Using Produkey on Windows 7 to try to get product key for remote Windows May 14, , pm. Robert says: I am an admin on my domain. I predict you'll figure out what you've done wrong, bop your head, then go on to find Windows 7 is something you really like. Firewall settings were among the first items I checked. The user accounts in use are identical across all three systems, with identical passwords. All are administrator accounts.
The McAfee firewall settings are identical. McAfee does its own network thing, and interestingly, the McAfee network includes all three systems. Whether any kind of work or home group is involved seems irrelevant. Real life kind of intruded recently, thus there has been no time to spend on this project. As far as me looking silly, so be it. That XPPro system does what I need done, with little fuss nor bother. To see that system run stably for 30 days is very common. Its workload starts before 8am, and between 9am and pm it is working hard running several different charting packages which utilize real time data.
That system also runs Outlook, various browsers, and whatever else I throw at it as need be. It gets hibernated very late each night, and brought back up by 7am each day. That XPPro system simply works, day in and day out. I was finding that XPPro was proving much more stable that was Vista, fwtw, and certainly easier on resources.
Win7 may yet prove as reliable and stable and useful for my needs as has XPPro, only time will tell. As far as me looking silly, I am happy looking silly all the way to the bank. Am I the only person in consumer and small business land who is in no hurry to toss what has worked quietly, calmly and reliably, for years? There are more of us across many different vertical industries than MSFT would prefer, to be sure.
In all seriousness, I've been hearing nothing but bad things about McAfee lately. Honestly, I'd try removing that and seeing how things go. We have three machines, desktop running XP, and two laptops running Windows 7. Applications that rely on the network fail between the two. Haved wasted a weeks work and thousands of consulting dollars on this. Shame on Microsoft. This is a widespread and extremely nutty problem.
I had the same exact problem. After over a month of connecting easily back and forth between two XP desktops and a new Win 7 laptop, the Win 7 laptop stopped connecting to the XP desktop.
XP desktop can access the Win7 laptop and access the shared folders. Win7 laptop cannot access the shared folders from the XP desktop. Spent hours and hours troubleshooting. Simple, stupid cause and fix.
Stumbled across this finally in a help file: "Both computers must be on the same system time. Corrected it's time to the correct time and the connection was restored without so much as a reboot. That version of the Windows operating system installed like that. Can you see why it works?
Administrator to Administrator. If there is no account by that name on the target machine, the connection is rejected. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums.
Answered by:. Archived Forums. Sign in to vote. The windows 7 network map shows it has seen it but states that it cannot be placed in the map. I have diabled IPV6 but still no go. Both machines are in a homegroup. Anyone got any ideas? Thursday, January 14, PM.
Hi MSayre, Since your issue is not related to the current one, please create a new thread in our Networking forum and discuss there. Marked as answer by zipe Thursday, January 21, PM. Tuesday, January 19, AM. This solved. How to get XP to talk to windows 7 and share. The actions that MS forgot to tell us all.. Sorry but I do not normally complain about MS as I work closeley with them on other developments but this one has really got me - three weeks to resolve and a lot of digging - MS really want to look at their redundancy testing as it is flawed!!
This Fix is for XP home but maybe of use for the other variations. If you are not comfortable in editing the registry then get someone who is as you will need to do so. If they are not checked then do so and reboot back into SAFE mode. If not, open the dword and set them to 0. This will avoid any 'Server Storage Errors' occuring when you later try to access your shares. As this point tell windows 7 to refresh it's printer driver list and once cpompleted then select your networked printer.
Windows 7 will then load the correct drivers an donce completed just follow the on screen instructions. It should lead you to a request for a test print.. Say yes.. Thursday, January 21, PM. Go to the Network and Sharing Center. My Windows 10 machine logs in using a Microsoft account, so when it asked for the username and password, I entered my email address and password, which worked.
It finally worked after I did two things. First, I clicked on the Setup a home or small office network link that you see in the screenshot above. Also, be sure to checkout my complete guide to troubleshooting homegroups in Windows. Founder of Help Desk Geek and managing editor. He began blogging in and quit his job in to blog full-time.
He has over 15 years of industry experience in IT and holds several technical certifications. Read Aseem's Full Bio.
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